Behold the Top-Rated New TV Shows for the Last 20 Seasons (PHOTOS)

1998–2000: Jesse

This NBC sitcom — starring Christina Applegate as a single mother caught in a love triangle — earned great ratings for two seasons but was axed in 2000 because the Peacock Network had high expectations for whatever show followed Friends on the schedule. (See Leap of Faith later in this gallery.)

ABC Photo Archives/ABC via Getty Images

1999–2000: Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?

The ABC game show aired on Tuesday, Thursday, and Sunday — and those airings respectively scored #1, #2, #3 on the ratings chart.

Monty Brinton/CBS

2000–2001: Survivor

Millionaire expanded to four nights a week in 2000 but was overtaken by this CBS castaway competition, which is now in its 37th season.

Getty Images

2001–2002: Leap of Faith

Remember this single-camera comedy? Neither do we — NBC axed it after only just six episodes, despite it being the top-rated new TV show of the season and despite its cast including future stars Sarah Paulson and Regina King.

Scott Gries/ImageDirect

2002–2003: Joe Millionaire

You’ll surely recall this FOX reality show, a dating competition in which women vied for the heart of a working-class construction worker they believed to be a millionaire. (Entertainment, right?)

Douglas Gorenstein/NBC

2003–2004: The Apprentice

Donald Trump’s boasts about this NBC competition’s ratings verge on hyperbole, but there’s no question his show was the top-rated new show during this season.

ABC/BOB D'AMICO

2004–2005: Desperate Housewives

The secrets of Wisteria Lane kept viewers tuning into this ABC primetime soap every week, and its ratings even topped those of fellow freshman series Grey’s Anatomy and Lost.

ABC/BOB D'AMICO

2005–2006: Dancing with the Stars

The first season of this ABC ballroom competition lasted only six weeks and boasted only six contestants, but nevertheless, millions of viewers tuned in to see Kelly Monaco cha-cha-cha her way to the first Mirrorball trophy.

Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images

2006–2007: Sunday Night Football

Returning TV shows reigned supreme this season, and this NBC sportscast — the top-rated new show of the season — only ranked #11. The top-rated new scripted series of the season, the short-lived CBS legal drama Shark, tied for 20th place.

Fox

2007–2008: The Moment of Truth

Hosted by Mark L. Walberg — as in, not Mark Wahlberg — this sadistic FOX game show had contestants competing for cash prizes by answering deeply-personal questions, including a woman who admitted to cheating on her husband.

2009–2010: NCIS: Los Angeles

2010–2011: Body of Proof

It only lasted three seasons, but this ABC procedural — starring Dana Delany as a medical examiner — reigned supreme during this season, even beating The Big Bang Theory and The Voice.

John P. Filo/CBS

2011–2012: Person of Interest

Created by future Westworld co-creator Jonathan Nolan and executive-produced by J.J. Abrams, this CBS sci-fi crime drama kept was definitely “of interest” to viewers this season.

John Paul Filo

2012–2013: Elementary

CBS scored another win with this procedural, starring Jonny Lee Miller as a modern-day Sherlock Holmes and Lucy Liu as a gender-swapped Watson.

Will Hart/NBC

2013–2014: The Blacklist

James Spader made a menacing return to TV as the star of this NBC crime thriller. The show’s 2017 spin-off, The Blacklist: Redemption, didn’t fare nearly as well and was canceled after one season.

Jean Whiteside/FOX

2014–2015: Empire

Its ratings have dropped precipitously in recent years, but this FOX musical drama was all anyone could talk about in 2015 when it made its mid-season debut.

Shane Harvey/FOX

2015–2016: The X-Files

Sure, this FOX sci-fi drama was technically a continuation, but we have to commend it for its spooky-good ratings, especially because it hadn’t been on the air for 13 years. (Besides, we’d otherwise have to give to honor to the NBC talent show Little Big Shots.)

David M. Russell/CBS

2016–2017: Bull

Plot twist! We were all ready to commend This Is Us for this season, but the NBC family drama was narrowly edged out by this CBS legal drama starring NCIS alum Michael Weatherly. (The NCIS Effect is real, y’all.)

ABC/Adam Rose

2017–2018: Roseanne

If we gave the crown to The X-Files, we have to do so for this ABC sitcom, too, especially because it had been off the air for two decades. According to Deadline, it ranked behind only Sunday Night Football and This Is Us.

The broadcast networks are currently trotting out their new primetime shows, but don’t put too much stock in the initial ratings.

As the series in the gallery above prove, many freshman TV shows start out hot and end up canceled just a couple seasons later, while others don’t find their audience until their sophomore seasons or later.